Los Angeles Times

‘Mind-blowing’ discovery in Monterey Bay

A rare gathering of 1,000 octopuses nursing their eggs has scientists in awe.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde alejandra. re yes velar de @latimes.com

Scientists have discovered an octopus nursery of sorts in Monterey Bay.

More than 1,000 of the cephalopod­s were seen last week clustered in a previously unexplored, federally protected area off California’s coast, their bodies tucked upside down into nooks with their tentacles inverted and covering clusters of white eggs.

Researcher­s were awed by the sight of the large, rocky landscape speckled with hundreds of the sea creatures, which looked like bright dots glowing in the dark ocean.

Scientists and educators were among those who observed images from remotely operated vehicles aboard the Ocean Exploratio­n Trust’s Nautilus, a 211foot vessel that has been charting previously unseen marine life and capturing it on a 24-hour livestream since June.

“To find something like this in our sanctuary, let alone in the West Coast, is pretty mind-blowing,” said Chad King, a marine biologist with the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and lead scientist for the expedition.

The researcher­s said that this type of gathering of deep-sea octopuses has been reported only once before, when a smaller group of about 100 were brooding eggs in hydrotherm­al water off Costa Rica.

During the hour that the Nautilus research team observed the octopuses off the California coast, King said, the scientists saw no end to creatures lined up in the cracks of the rocks, from which an unknown shimmering fluid was seeping. There are more questions than answers as they left the area.

The clear pattern of where the octopuses were located indicates a relationsh­ip between the fluid seeping out of the rocks and where they chose to lay their eggs.

“What we don’t know is why,” he said. “Some people may assume it’s because [the fluid] is warm or there’s higher oxygen levels or maybe it cleans their eggs.”

The researcher­s were unable to take the water’s temperatur­e or detect what other chemicals might be flowing out of the rocks, King said, so the reason for the choice of nursing ground will remain a mystery until more research is done.

 ??  ?? THE OCTOPUSES are clustered in a previously unexplored, federally protected area off the coast.
THE OCTOPUSES are clustered in a previously unexplored, federally protected area off the coast.

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